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Large Vase by Emile Gallé ca. 1900

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Rare Pair of 1900s Vases
Located in Paris, FR
Pair of 1900s vases in glazed stoneware, decorated with hunting birds, insects, leaves and fruit, ribbons and masks of lion. The inside is lined with a container of tinplate.
Category

Early 20th Century Unknown Art Nouveau Vases

Materials

Stoneware

Large vase with butterflies by C.Schneider, Le Verre Français, France circa 1925
By Le Verre Francais, Charles Schneider
Located in Paris, FR
A large vase with handles in acid-etched multi-layered glass, with rotating butterfly decoration, red and speckled navy blue butterflies on a yellow and sky-blue marmorated ground. S...
Category

Vintage 1920s French Art Nouveau Vases

Materials

Glass

"Vine leaves" double glass vase by Daum
By Daum
Located in Paris, FR
A "Vine leaves" double glass vase by Daum - Nancy, with a deeply engraved decor of brown-red leaves with gold highlights, on an acid frosted green background. Neck and base rubbed wi...
Category

Antique Early 1900s French Art Nouveau Vases

Materials

Art Glass

Large vase on pedestal, Sarreguemines, France, second half of the 19th century
By Sarreguemines
Located in Paris, FR
Large vase on pedestal, decorated with faun heads, in Sarreguemines enameled earthenware. Covered in flamed cobalt-blue enamel, the grips in the shape of faun heads are gilded with g...
Category

Antique Mid-19th Century French Neoclassical Vases

Materials

Gold, Enamel

Vase « Pyjama », by Roger Capron, Vallauris, France, circa 1960
By Roger Capron
Located in Paris, FR
Large baluster-shaped vase with « Pyjama » design in polychrome enameled ceramic. Signed Capron Vallauris. In perfect condition, but some original enameling defects are visible on the photos. Roger Capron, France (1922-2006) Roger Capron, born in Vincennes on September 4...
Category

Vintage 1960s French Modern Vases

Materials

Ceramic

Interesting square vase, by Roger Capron, Vallauris, France, circa 1970
By Roger Capron
Located in Paris, FR
Rare square enameled stoneware vase by Capron in Vallauris, decorated with a winged chimera. It is stamped « Capron Vallauris France ».
Category

Late 20th Century French Modern Vases

Materials

Stoneware

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Émile Gallé Miniature Cameo Vase, Art Nouveau, Ca 1900
By Émile Gallé
Located in Delft, NL
Émile Gallé miniature Cameo vase, Art Nouveau, ca 1900 Émile Gallé (Nancy, 1846 –1904) was a French glassmaker and furniture designer Émile Gallé 7...
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Émile Gallé small Cameo vase, Art Nouveau, ca 1900
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Located in Delft, NL
Émile Gallé small Cameo vase, Art Nouveau, ca 1900 Émile Gallé (Nancy, 1846 –1904) was a French glassmaker and furniture designer Émile Gallé 20 cm hig...
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Emile Galle Cameo Glass Vase 1900
By Émile Gallé
Located in Autonomous City Buenos Aires, CABA
overlaid and acid-etched with pendant flowers and leaves signed in cameo Gallé This beautiful glass vase is an authentic vase due to the petal-shaped mouth opening. very attractive...
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Antique Early 1900s French Art Deco Vases

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Emile Galle Vase
By Émile Gallé
Located in Pompano Beach, FL
A Galle cameo glass tall stickneck Clematis vase. Signed Galle in cameo.
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Early 20th Century French Glass

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Large Emile Galle Scenic Cameo Vase
By Émile Gallé
Located in Dallas, TX
Emile Galle scenic wheel carved and acid etched cameo vase. A beautiful and tall cameo vase by Galle. The 18 - 1/2” tall vase has a background of muted yellow glass near the base, which progresses to blue/gray at mid-vase, and then peach towards the top. Brown, cameo cut trees are generously displayed across the body of the vase, with the addition of a boat in the lake. Signed "Galle". Dimensions: 18 - 1/2” x 10” x 8”. Condition: Very good Émile Gallé (8 May 1846 in Nancy – 23 September 1904 in Nancy) was a French artist and designer who worked in glass, and is considered to be one of the major innovators in the French Art Nouveau movement. He was noted for his designs of Art Nouveau glass art and Art Nouveau furniture, and was a founder of the École de Nancy or Nancy School, a movement of design in the city of Nancy, France. Gallé born on 4 March 1846 in the city of Nancy, France. His father, Charles Gallé, was a merchant of glassware and ceramics who had settled in Nancy in 1844, and his father-in-law owned a factory in Nancy which manufactured mirrors. His father took over the direction of his mother's family business, and began to manufacture glassware with a floral design. He also took over a struggling faience factory and began manufacturing new products. The young Gallé studied philosophy and natural science at the Lycée Imperial in Nancy. At the age of sixteen he went to work for the family business as an assistant to his father, making floral designs and emblems for both faience and glass. In his spare time he became an accomplished botanist, studying with D.A. Godron, the director of the Botanical Gardens of Nancy and author of the leading textbooks on French flora. He collected plants from the region and from as far away as Italy and Switzerland. He also took courses in painting and drawing, and made numerous drawings of plants, flowers, animals and insects, which became subjects of decoration. At the age of sixteen he finished the Lycée in Nancy and went to Weimar in Germany from 1862–1866 to continue his studies in philosophy, botany, sculpture and drawing. In 1866, to prepare himself to inherit the family business, he went to work as an apprentice at the glass factory of Burgun and Schwerer in Meisenthal, and made a serious study of the chemistry of glass production. Some of his early glass and faience works for the family factory at Saint-Clémont were displayed at the 1867 Paris Universal Exposition. In early 1870 he designed a complete set of dishware with a rustic animal designs for the family enterprise. During this time he became acquainted with the painter, sculptor and engraver Victor Prouvé, an artist of the romantic "troubadour" style, who became his future collaborator in the Nancy School. He enlisted for military service in the Franco-Prussian War in 1870, then was demobilised after the disastrous French defeat in 1871 and the French loss to Germany of much of the province of Lorraine, including Meisenthal where he had done his apprenticeship. Thereafter the Cross of Lorraine, the patriotic symbol of the region, became part of his signature on many of his works of art. After his demobilization Gallé went to London, where he represented his father at an exhibition of the arts of France, then to Paris, where he remained for several months, visiting the Louvre and Cluny Museum, studying examples of ancient Egyptian art, Roman glassware and ceramics, and especially early Islamic enamelled...
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Antique Early 1900s French Art Nouveau Vases

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Glass Vase by Émile Gallé
By Émile Gallé
Located in LU
An exquisite early twentieth-century Art Nouveau vase by renowned French artist Émile Gallé. This stunning piece, crafted from sand-polished glass, showcases Gallé’s signature revere...
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